f HKNPF.KSON. 'JATLTVaY to ! CENTRAL I CAROLINA. SINKTEKN'J H veau FRANCE MAY 1 WAVS REMAIN FOB FURTHER CUTS IN PROPERTY TAXES One l« To Remove Present 15 Cent* Levy and Other Is Mate. Supported Full Term LATTER WOULD BE SAVING TO STATE New Revenues Might Be Found For 15 Cents Tax And Then Levy That A?«in for Two Months Ex tended Term Which Would Cut County Rates *»«»•> Dispatch Rirm ... * ,r " altar Hvtrl »l* J i n INK 1-11X11.1. N'-'V. 2* Only two ways ■ too t.v which Ihe 1933 (Jen > -in - v can further reduce M«»;.erty. according to those - ’I «' ’ h the situation hr re. Any *e i property tax reduction T 11 h V th ‘ v counties locally. ' r ' ? property taxes can ' '• iemove the 15 cents -tty tax for the six months ■ •• • ni «ncJ way U to abolish ail of j vcia. tax and charter dis mouituinmg two months • •: m< in the schools, paid <i lax levies in these dirf ifnfKi.se h statewide pro ff"i a Statewide extended *n. ' her property taxes can be a. .ion ot the General As -ime the 1931 General As 'bolished all local property ."i roads and schools except ''inties or district.- - arc per • levv small -supplementary "i chools. The General As n'- 'hi powei. of course, to (‘limit the levying of any •• .... taxes for schools with 'Uppiement the amount al- I 1 ( he State and to require h"ol to operate on the State-' ■’ huilget. Teie was a good ‘■n'lment ip favor of rcstric 'h. - kind in the 1931 gen -1 -'ddv aml it may become ‘fc'.r in th** 1933 assembly. -••n* Hilly agreed that the 15 (Continued on Page Three.! HINDENBURG drops OFFERS TO HITLER Ke-rliu. x,, v . -*4—(Al*)—l'reai "*r" ...I, Hindentuirg today with 'r-'v his orfer of the German ' nanet-Uorshlp to Adolf HlUer, ' '' , " l *1 n, »t organize a nupport '"s: majority In the R4ocli4tag, I'irn.d to eofuudemtion of aHr " lh, r• a nit I date. NEW POWER PLANS OFFERED TO - STATE • N>v 24 «AP»- A plan he -v. .vave tite Stall- hundreds - on r - pow bill baa bee** ‘ by Jo. - Bank.-. graduate •' N C Sar > Coil-'g.-. Ifink.v plan the plant. > *■ ( oilp.r.. would be * nlarged jiodu e n. cuiient to • S at>- ln.-ti ui ions In Ra nc.udwg the state school for ■ i.d .Mat" prsion and the State " ' 1 t"i the insane. SIMMONS, MORRISON EACH GIVEN VOTE - \ ' * N,,V -* l AP» -A total of s 1 y were cast for United . ‘ " for the short term In 1 tevent «lection, with . ( ■* nation Moinson and for- Jt •'•• -''l (* unifold MoLendel Sim. ~ *' h ge ting one vote. " _ ..a, canvas of returns by J " b'* a 'd of canvassers revealed j, ‘°d Robust R. Reynolds, '' r ~ . ,r> -31.534; Senator Morrison, s . ’ 1 ‘timbent. 1; formor Senator n ti defeated two year® ago by it v i n the Democratic K , ' was cast iy Wake ’• rt "'- •''iTiTions' in Forsyte t ///l I IKS Ik\ /t- * A o mm II I A m. m | I I m I i m ■■III I fcn I % % 1 I B ■ %J| wg M 1 I I I Hfil ill ■ ■■ ■■■■ ■■ iirniicrann Satin StHtmtrh yU LL LEASED WIKB ftlßWra or THK ASdOGIATBO^RBaa* Roosevelt Rides Avenue I * ‘ Governor Roosevelt. I>re3idcnit.elcct of the Unit.-d Sutes, is shown her e in the autr.mobile in which he rode down Pennsylvania avenue in Washington on his way from : he Union Station to the White House Tuesday when he arrived for his momentous conference with Piesident Hoover on the war de-bts situa tion. The Capitol is glimpsed im the background. Hoover Offers Contrast To Late President Taft In Reactions To Defeat By CHARLES I*. STEWART Washington, Nov. 24.--President Hoover is what can perhaps beat be described as a stolid loser. President Taft met defeat with a sportsmanship that gave the effect at least (whatever his innermost tho ughts may have been) of taking all the sting out of it. If he could have entered upon his second campaign with the same degree of popularity that he quickly regained by his grace ful acceptance of thi verdict against him. it is quite among the possibilities that he would not have been beaten. STATE HAS CASH ~ BALANCE OCT. 31 But Nearly All Os $5,335,* 080 Needed For Debt Payments In January DatlT Harm* la Ike Sir Unlu-r ttntri . nr j. c baikehiiu *' Raleigh. Nov. 24.—The .Stair of North Carolina had a cash balance of $5,335,080 on hand in the State Terasurv on October 31, accoxdiitg to the combined statement of the au ditor and treasurer made public to day. However, the greater portion of this amount will be needed to meet payment? on $5,200,000 worth of In debtedness that will fall due in Jan uary, according to Henry the Budget Bureau. Os the $5,200,000 of Indebtedness due in January, how ever. about $270,000 will be paid from special accounts rather th-*n fr°m the highway or general fund, Mr. {Continued go Page Thmi newspaper published ONLY DAILY PAY DEBT HERE IF BRITAIN PAYS There is none of the Taftian non chalance about President Hoover. However, the Californian is not a poor loser, either. He offers no alibis. Nothing is more certain than that, according to his lights, he has given to the country, during his trm in the White House the best there was in him,. and that he considers the American peopie ut tc-rly unappreciative of an effort but for wich, in his honest opinion, they would have been vastly worse off. (Continued on Page Three.) RUSSIA AND WAN THREATEN TROUBLE Rift Occurs In Friendly Co operation Over Manchu ria Rebellion Tokyo, Nov. 24 (AP)-—A rift occur red today in the heretofore friendly cooperation between Russia and Ja pan during the rebellion In north western Manchuria. This information came from the Japanese charge d'affaires at Moscow who sent a Russian government com munication to the foreign office ask. ing that the Japanese military mis sion at Machec&kaya leave Siberia soon. The mission has been at Machevsk aya to negotiate with the rebel Chi nese general Su Ping-Wen, who cap. tured and held nearly 300 Japanese a few weeks ago when he took charge of a larg esllce of Manchuria against the Soviet border, , --.'PERSON, N. C., THURSDAY FTERNOOij, NOVEMBER 24, IM* IN -THIS SECTION OP NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA TAR HEELS RAUSE FOR TUANUIT RECREATION EVENT f General Hcliday Through, out State, With Service* Held In Many of the Churche* 9 FOOTBALL' CONTESTS SHARING ATTENTION Two Games in State Feature Celebration, With Gard ners Having South Caro lina Governor and Wife Guests for Statc-Clemson Game In Raleigh Charlotte. Nov. 24. (AP)-Carrying out a tradition older than the na tion. North Carolinians lodav observ ed Thanksgiving Day. It was a general holiday through out the State. Thanksgiving services were held in nearly every - church. Thousands took advantage of the holiday to enter th« woods in quest of. game, wki la ffwitJiadfrwUmofced mote than its usual following. Two major contests were played in the State. WaWke Forest and David son meeting at Davidson, while N. C. State and South Carolina played at Raleigh. Governor and Mrs. Gard ner and their guests. Governor and Mrs. Ibra C. Blackwood, of South Car olina, were to witness the Raleigh game. REMOVEBANDIT'S WIFE AT HOSPITAL He I* Believed Responsible For Disappearance After Roooery Tulsa. Okla., Nov. 24 iAP> The wife of Charles (Pretty Boy) Floyd was removed mysteriously from a Tulsa hospital last night, leading of. ficers to the Boley bank rob bery in which the outlaw's lieuten ant, George Birdwell, was slain, may have been planned to divert attention from Floyds presence here. Attendants at Momlngside hospital said today that "somqone came for Mrs. Floyd last night in a car." They declined to discuss the incident fur ther. The wife of the elusive gunman, who had slipped through many an Oklahoma man hunt in the last two years, was operated upon for appen dicitis at the hospital. Investigators advanced the theory that Birdwell headed the abortive raid on the Farmers and Merchants State Bank of Boley yesterday in order to lead pursuers on a false chaae for hfs chief, hunted for many previous bank robberies, while Floyd himself super, vised the safe removal of his young wife. Col. Robt. E. Olds, Once Official of 1 Government, Dies Paris, Nov. 24,—(AP> Colonel Robert E. Olds, former assistant sec retary of state of the United States, and internationally known attorney, died suddenly here today of ap poplexy. He was 57 years old. Colonel Olds, who was Frank Kel logg’s under seertary of Btaie. left his apartment, according to Us cus tom to walk to bis office. He got only a few yards from his huu when he was taken violently ill. He suc ceeded in returning to his home but died in whowas urgently ap popiexy aa the * WEATHER FOB NORTH CAROLINA. Rain tonight and Friday; not much change In tempnrahuw • HOW COL. ROBINS LOST IDENTITY s % i|f’ 4 -> • This is an exclusive picture of Col. , Raymond Robins, the missing dry cru. I •ader. as he appeared ih~overalls, weal ing a bear’d and caTrying 'a "w alking 1 ‘ stick when ho lived at Whittier, N. j C., for tw 0 months as "Reynolds Rog- , Farm Relief Now Looms For The Short Session Mortgage Financing and Philippine Independence Also Seen Likely To Share Center of Attention at “Lame Duck“ Sitting of This Congress Washington, Nciv. 21.-(AP) Three party perennials of agricultural leg islation farm relief. Philippine Inde pendence and mortgage financing are expected to come before the ‘‘lame duck ' session of Congress as a result of President-elect Roosevelt s conferences here with Democratic leaders. Chairman Jonen. of the House Ag riculture Committee, and Represen tative Rainey, of Illinois, the Demo cratic floor leader, and candidate for the speakership in the 73rd Congress, have been told to draft a bill to hasten national assistance for agri culture. The President-elect was represent ed as hoping to avoid a special ses sion after his inauguration on March 4. He hoped farm relief may be had in the forthcoming meeting. During his campaign, be stressed the need for making the tariff ef iNFANTMCtNIN AUTO IS RETURNED Paul Turner ’Found In Car .Some Distance From Home In Dallas Dallas. Tex., Nov. 24 (AP)—Paul ; Turner, two years old, stolen in his mothers automobile last night, was 1 found today and restored to his pa. ; rents, mr. and Mrs. J- B. Turner, ap , parently none the worse for his ex | perience. 1 , Dudley Briscoe, a painter,, noticed j the Turner automobile in a iriveway, •ieveihl blocks from where Mrs. Tur ner had left it ana reported immsdl* ateiy to police. H© ecognixed the child, as h« crawled from the back seat, where the mother had Mt him sleeping. Officers were on the scene |in a few minutes and returned the child lo its mother. There were no indications whether the automobile had been driver far, or whether thieves who stole it had abandoned it when they 4<« overed the baby in the hack | _ . . PUBLISHED EVERY AFTBRDOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. , CIS." At right is 13-year-old Carl Fb>b. i er ‘ the HbhAWer hoy who identified Robins from newspaper photographs. ‘Robins suddenly regained his memory j the third time he was confronted by , his wile, in Asheville, N. c. fective on farm giving fats [ and oils the full measure of protec tion and re-financing farm loans at j a rate of interest sufficiently low to permit dispossessed owners to regain their land. While "farm relief" broadly ericom [ passes any legislation of benefit to agriculture, it has come to represent i within the last ten years a program to control surplus production and make the tariff applicable to agriculture as well as to industry. Jt is regarded as entirely possible that the proposed conference of farm representatives in Washington before December 5 will find the American Farm Bureau Fed eration holding out for the old equal ization fee. the National Grange for the export debenture and the newer school of thought pulling for the al lotment plan promulgated by W. R. Ronald, editor of the Mitchell. S. D., Republican, and his associates. ATCMTir IS KILLED IN LEAP Ivan Gates Jumps From Window After Quarrel Had With His Wife New York, Nov. 24 (AP)—lvan Gatfs. flying circus “king" who has promoted concessional air meets In almost every stat e in the leap ed to his death today from the win dow of his sixth floor apartment at 220 West 24th street. Police said that Gates leaped from the window early this morning after an argument with his wife. H« con cluded hte argument, they said, with a. threat to jump, and, though Mrs. Gates grappled with Urn and sought to restrain |}jm, he foufcht his way to the window and leaped to his death, landing on his head. He was pronounced dead by an ambulance surgeon, and after an in. vefctigutlon listed the death as a suicide. Gates was credited with having par ticipated in some 2.000 air meets in 48 states, and he exploited many Os the flying circus exhibitions of the army air circus. 6 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY SleiSeis OPENED UP ANEW England s Case For Susper> sion and Revision May Now Be Presented In Full To U. S. next stepljT UP TO THE EUROPEANS Hoover‘s Proposal For Commission To Re-Exam, ine Whole Debt Situation. Meets Strong and Seem, ingly Conclusive Opposi tion From Congress Paris, Nov. 21 (AP) France ap peared ready today to make the I3< cemher payments in war debts in terest to the United Stales if Great Britain met her obligations in Wash ington on that date, but parliamen tary complications were brewing. Premier Edouard Herrlot waa re presented as prepared to stake the fate of his government in pnrliamcnt on the point. He failed to attend a meeting of the parliamentary .foreign affairs committee > >*sL;.iday, and the committee postponed d..-cushion #f the debt is.,u,*. This was taken as a sign of confidence. WHOLE QUESTION OPENED AFRESH. LONDON BEI.II-.X fcS London. Nov. 24. (Al ) Unofficial White Hall and parliament ary op inion today appeared to be that the question of war debts had been ie opened by President Hoover’d meut about them, and the Briti.h case for suspension of payments and revision may now be presented in full. Meanwhile, toe discussion of (he situation overshadowed I other things as the members gathered in the lobbies of the House ~f Commons. The discussion penctratpci to the gov ernment offices in While Hal! i ? well, although the American rcplv to the British note suggesting exfen mu of the Hoover moratorium had .ml yet Di-en received. Foreign office officials were under stood to tie dealing with Hie debt question, and a statement from Neville Chamberlain, chancellor <>f the exchequer on th general "fiction was awaited in the House of Com mons. HOOVER COMMISSION IDEA FAVORED ON BY LEADERS Washington, Nov. 24.- <AP> Iro spite President Hoover's advocacy of creating an agency to re-examine the war debts, indications today were that this government would do nothing, leaving the next step in the troubled situation to its foreign debtors. Not only did Mr. Hoover's proposal meet with strong and apparently con clusive opposition by congressional leaders, but this opposition was back ed up by a statement from President elect Roosevelt that he believed exist ing diplomatic channels were ade quate to hear new pleas from Eu rope. Such an expression from the head of the Incoming national adminio i ration, even though not intended ad dictation to Congress, was interpret ed here as effectively closing the door for the present to an American initiated wholesale review of the sll,- 000.000.000 obligation to this country. While this situation was developing. Secretary Sttmson handed to the Bri tish, French and Belgian -ambassadors the formal replies of this government denying their requests for an exten sion of the moratorium. His auction followed President Hoov er's ieriigthy statement Issued yestei day afternoon, which said "no fact n have, been presented by the debter governments which would justify po t ponement of the December 15 pay ments of nearly $125,000,000.’* Hr. Roosevelt had full knowledg. - of thin development before departing for Warm Springs. Ga. rooseveltarrTves IN WARM SPRINGS, GA. Warm Springs. Ga, Nov. !i— -—Franklin D. Roosevelt ar rived here at 10:5* a. m. today for a two weeks stay that will be marked by a aeries of conferences with congressional leaders, i

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